I found this thing while cleaning, what do you think??

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Ok so I found this scale while I was cleaning out some old stuff. I don't have a food scale and have pretty much been estimating how much I eat. What do you think? Is it reliable? I have no idea how old it is, this house was built in the 1600s (not that the scale is that old, lol) and it is just filled with random things.

10622319_10152221955020683_1414961388_n.jpg?oh=dca45298772d547d2562659263e72c8b&oe=53F7B500&__gda__=1408726253_0640094d8e19c588ab324f362ff917fc
Four medium size potatoes, the scale shows a bit over 200g

10637759_10152221955005683_248027768_n.jpg?oh=1e8ef6e530f51293a65c1c1ed045f428&oe=53F73CAA&__gda__=1408727931_856eebfc9990a60fb51d5e86d98a56fe
One small/medium potatoe, the scale shows around 40g
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Replies

  • KarenJanine
    KarenJanine Posts: 3,497 Member
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    It's probably more accurate than eyeballing.

    Why not take an item of a known weight and weigh that and see how it compares to the scale reading? Then you'll know if it's well calibrated or not.

    I would really recommend investing in a digital food scale though, they really don't cost much and will give accuracy to 1 g, which a mechanical scale usually cannot.
  • ElkeKNJ
    ElkeKNJ Posts: 207 Member
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    it is beautiful. A great ornament, if it does not work.
    As previous entry said, weigh a closed packet of butter or something, and try it out.
  • ainarsraciks
    ainarsraciks Posts: 166 Member
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    Does not seems right. I've been using electric kitchen scale for long time now and one medium size potato is around 100 - 150 grams (depends what you consider "medium", but it's in that range). I've been eating potatoes quite regularly.

    The thing with mechanic scales is if one little detail is damaged or bent the wrong way by only couple milometers it can show very large error, which I think is the case here.
  • rollng_thundr
    rollng_thundr Posts: 634 Member
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    Ok so I found this scale while I was cleaning out some old stuff. I don't have a food scale and have pretty much been estimating how much I eat. What do you think? Is it reliable? I have no idea how old it is, this house was built in the 1600s (not that the scale is that old, lol) and it is just filled with random things.

    10622319_10152221955020683_1414961388_n.jpg?oh=dca45298772d547d2562659263e72c8b&oe=53F7B500&__gda__=1408726253_0640094d8e19c588ab324f362ff917fc
    Four medium size potatoes, the scale shows a bit over 200g

    10637759_10152221955005683_248027768_n.jpg?oh=1e8ef6e530f51293a65c1c1ed045f428&oe=53F73CAA&__gda__=1408727931_856eebfc9990a60fb51d5e86d98a56fe
    One small/medium potatoe, the scale shows around 40g

    Whether it's accurate or not.. it's hella cool!
  • buffywhitney
    buffywhitney Posts: 172 Member
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    Absolutely you can and should use this scale. As long as it is calibrated it should be as accurate if not more accurate than any digital scale. I have been weighing myself on a Health-O-Meter scale for 30 years.
  • __Aid__
    __Aid__ Posts: 72 Member
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    measure against a tin or packet that has the weight printed on. it should give you a pretty good idea id its accurate or not
  • Hell_Flower
    Hell_Flower Posts: 348 Member
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    Get it re-calibrated and bobs your uncle. Put something on it that you know exactly how much it weights already to check. You might find that a clock/watch maker will be able to re-calibrate it, if it's a little bit off.

    It looks awesome and, lets face, was built to last.
  • misschoppo
    misschoppo Posts: 463 Member
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    what a beautiful object :happy: as others have said, if you weight something with a known weight and find out that way if it is working properly then no reason not to use it.
  • sabified
    sabified Posts: 1,051 Member
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    it is beautiful. A great ornament, if it does not work.
    As previous entry said, weigh a closed packet of butter or something, and try it out.


    Agreed with this and the post above it... I would definitely use it ornamentally, though probably not for actual accuracy, even if it does show proper numbers :)

    A digital scale would be much easier to work with
  • lamps1303
    lamps1303 Posts: 432 Member
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    Weigh a bag of sugar or something where you know the weight but isn't in heavy packaging (which will obviously skew the results). If you have any weights or dumbells that would be your best bet.
  • pineapple_jojo
    pineapple_jojo Posts: 440 Member
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    Sell it and buy a digital food scale with the proceeds! :)
  • AglaeaC
    AglaeaC Posts: 1,974 Member
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    You can use water. 100 ml is 100 g and 1000 ml/1 litre is 1000 g/1 kg. Put a measuring cup (if you use US cups, do the conversion math) on the scale and fill it with a known volume, then try with a larger volume such as a bowl to see whether the increase is linear or not. It should be linear for the scale to work properly, as water doesn't become increasingly heavy the more you add.
  • BrianE30
    BrianE30 Posts: 12 Member
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    That's a fine piece of kit. Love it! Since it is that old, I think it may have lost its accuracy. Still great though.
  • maasha81
    maasha81 Posts: 733 Member
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    I'd keep it as an ornament.
  • Liftng4Lis
    Liftng4Lis Posts: 15,150 Member
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    Love it, its fantastic!!
  • shapelyJ
    shapelyJ Posts: 57 Member
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    I weighed a tetra pack of chickpeas and noticed it was a little bit off. However, I found a little screw at the bottom where you are able to calibrate it! It works! I still don't know if I'll use it though, but it sure is pretty :)
  • Snip8241
    Snip8241 Posts: 767 Member
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    It's a keeper, working or not. Maybe find out what it's called or if there is a mark on it. You may be able to get it refurbished.
    Antique dealer?
  • JulieFinn
    JulieFinn Posts: 52 Member
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    You are so LUCKY! You just "found" this scales in your old house? Wow... talk about COOL!
  • Sabine_Stroehm
    Sabine_Stroehm Posts: 19,263 Member
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    Does not seems right. I've been using electric kitchen scale for long time now and one medium size potato is around 100 - 150 grams (depends what you consider "medium", but it's in that range). I've been eating potatoes quite regularly.

    The thing with mechanic scales is if one little detail is damaged or bent the wrong way by only couple milometers it can show very large error, which I think is the case here.
    Doesn't "medium" depend on what kind of potato? A "medium" russet might be different from a "medium" new potato...